Foreign Investors Record Net Sell of Rp 2 Trillion in First Session
Jakarta, CNBC Indonesia — Foreign investors are continuing to leave the Indonesian capital market. Throughout the first session today, Friday (5/6/2026), foreigners recorded total sell transactions of Rp 14.7 trillion and buy transactions of Rp 12.7 trillion, resulting in a net foreign sell of Rp 2 trillion.
Substantial foreign fund outflows poured out of major banking issuers. Bank Central Asia (BBCA) recorded a net sell of Rp 721.5 billion. Bank Mandiri (BMRI) followed with Rp 160.7 billion, and Bank Negara Indonesia (BBNI) with Rp 58 billion.
This foreign selling pressure caused the shares of major banks to decline. BBCA fell by 5.53%, BBNI by 4.09%, BMRI by 2.52%, and BBRI by 2.14%.
Furthermore, foreign selling also targeted a number of energy and commodity shares, including Chandra Asri Pacific (TPIA), Merdeka Copper Gold (MDKA), Antam (ANTM), and Bumi Resources (BUMI).
The Jakarta Composite Index (IHSG) continued its negative trend until midday today, Friday (5/6/2026). At the end of session 1, the IHSG was parked at the 5,692.16 level, down 2.53% or -147.62 points.
A total of 624 stocks moved into the red zone. There were 115 stocks that rose and the remaining 220 were stagnant. The transaction value was fairly busy, reaching Rp 21.07 trillion, involving 23.37 billion shares in 1.29 million transactions. Market capitalisation consequently slumped to Rp 10,017 trillion.
The transaction value reaching more than Rp 20 trillion in session 1 was largely contributed by jumbo transactions of Chandra Asri Pacific (TPIA) in the negotiation market.